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My previous/alt account is yetAnotherUser@feddit.de which will be abandoned soon.

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Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: June 1st, 2024

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  • Sure, but I’d argue the largest aspect is cultural.

    There’s a reason France’s protests are significantly more disruptive than those of other European nations, despite similar social resources and significantly worse police brutality.

    I mean, the US has denser cities than most of Europe. It’s not impossible to have large-scale demonstrations with hundreds of thousands of protestors in them.

    I suspect it’s just that most Americans aren’t all that interested in changing the status quo for the better. The amount of apathy is perhaps only topped by Russia.







  • This woman likes set theory because she was involved in a set theory workshop:

    https://dmg.tuwien.ac.at/sandramueller/conferences/

    But you’re kind of right that it’s not great that math is still a strongly male dominated field. There is not a single woman’s name in the Wikipedia article for set theory, where I first tried to find a counterexample.

    Also, you don’t necessarily need set theory to arrive at vacuous truths. Logic is enough:

    FALSE => [statement]

    Still, I think vacuous truths are fun because they are meaningless. Especially because they have to be considered in math or else your carefully constructed proof becomes invalid.


  • You’re right, but you also have cities like NYC with decent public transit and a higher population density than any German city.

    To be fair, the protests were held at state capitals but NYC is the far more nationally and internationally relevant city in that state. A protest with public backing would have little problem getting 100,000 people on the streets there, wouldn’t it?

    Even Oklahoma City has 680,000 inhabitants and is larger than all but 5 German cities. If we assume 680 people protested then that’s 0.1% of the city… which isn’t a lot really?

    The German protest series also had a somewhat short, though longer notice of around two weeks. Plus large protests are held on the weekend by design, to allow as many people as possible to join in. No clue what the turnout would’ve been on a regular Wednesday.

    But in all honesty, the US reaction to open fascism has been rather apathetic so far from what I can tell an ocean away. Which should be particularly concerning because apathy does not defeat fascism, ever.


  • yetAnotherUser@discuss.tchncs.deto196@lemmy.blahaj.zoneRogan rule
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    3 days ago

    Yes there is:

    Only men like nothing.

    Explanation:

    “Only XYZ like ABC” is equivalent to: “Everyone who likes ABC is also an XYZ.”

    Since everybody likes at least something, there is no one who likes nothing. The statement: “Everyone who likes nothing is also a man” is true because the “Everyone who likes nothing” part results in 0 people. And it’s true to say that everyone in a group of 0 people is a man. It’s also true that everyone in a group of 0 people is not a man.

    But other than vacuous truths, no sentence stating “Only man like XYZ” is true.



  • not having enough therapists or having too many people who seek them

    Neither actually. The health insurances are allowed to decide amongst themselves how many therapists are covered. And this number hasn’t been adjusted (much) since 1999 even though demand has skyrocketed since then.

    Approximately 50% of therapists in Germany cannot accept public health insurance. Yet there is enough demand from the 10% of Germans with private health insurance ( + those who pay for therapy thenselves) to keep those therapists afloat.

    In other words:

    12.5% of Germans have been diagnosed with depression => 9.5 million people officially diagnosed which is certainly an underreported figure.

    There are ~24,000 therapists in Germany.

    As a result, there are 396 people with depression per therapist - meaning if every therapist worked 40 hours per week with 1 hour per client you’d have to wait 10 weeks between sessions.

    Now add all other mental illnesses which would require therapy and you’d get an even larger number.

    Sure, not everyone diagnosed with depression requires therapy. But this doesn’t excuse the obvious lack of paid therapists - which is openly acknowledged by the public health insurances but they are not legally required to change anything.